Saturday Sports! K-Ranks: Top 25 and Bowl Picks
By Kevin Leyden | December 16, 2011 at 8:39 am | Sports | 0 comments | |

This loss to Iowa State, combined with a 34-point beatdown of rival Oklahoma, make it difficult to determine just how good Oklahoma State is.
It was a dark and stormy night. Somewhere in the world, anyway.
I, the college football enthusiast, pored over the latest edition of the BCS standings and tried to use it to rank my Nightcap Bowl Mania Confidence Page (you can register for free for a chance to win a $50 prize or T-shirt here. Fore more info, check out the facebook page). I thought about all the ways it attempts to rank teams that might never play each other. What exactly is a strong loss? How should margin of victory be adjusted for home-field advantage? What’s worse: an early loss to a team with a bad record or a late loss to equal competition? And what in the world are the agendas of the poll voters?
The list of questions is endless, and the BCS standings aim to reveal the answers. But the real question is: Who cares?
I realized that I could break down rankings as much as I liked and never uncover much. Politics and inordinate emphasis on wins and losses, rather than actual performance, would always keep me from answering the question I really care about, the one I imagine most of you would probably like answered as well. Between two teams, who’s better?
It’s all fine to compare teams by resume to determine which are most worthy of playing in better bowl games. But a team’s profile – headlined by its wins and losses – explains what has happened each time a team has stepped on the field. It’s great at predicting the past. However, there’s a lot of randomness involved in who wins and loses any given game.
I decided to create a rating system that cuts out all the garbage and is based entirely on performance. My model is built on three pillars: efficiency, tempo, and opponent strength. I crunched some numbers for every game this season between FBS teams: all 15 weeks, all 120 teams. For each game, I quantified each team’s performance by fitting it to the following scenario.
Team X played at some level against Team Y. Now they’re playing at the same level in a hypothetical game against a team that is the national average at everything, Team Z (roughly Washington State). Evaluated on a per-possession basis, how many points will Team X’s offense score on Team Z’s defense, and vice versa?
It was a fairly extensive undertaking, but I am stoked with the results. So here’s my Top 25, based entirely on performance and completely adjusted for schedule strength. All of this was analyzed game by game; I took no shortcuts. I’ve shown records here for fun, but the other numbers you will see are offensive points per 100 possessions against Team Z and points allowed on defense per 100 of Team Z’s possessions. Enjoy!
- Alabama Crimson Tide (11-1, 7-1 SEC): 351, 44
- LSU Tigers (13-0, 8-0 SEC): 418, 66
- Wisconsin Badgers (11-2, 6-2 B10): 471, 155
- Florida State Seminoles(8-4, 5-3 ACC): 292, 101
- Oklahoma State Cowboys (11-1, 8-1 B12): 409, 144
- Stanford Cardinal (11-1, 8-1 P12): 422, 152
- Oklahoma Sooners (9-3, 6-3 B12): 303, 110
- USC Trojans (10-2, 7-2 P12): 322, 129
- Georgia Bulldogs (10-3, 7-1 SEC): 261, 107
- Arkansas Razorbacks (10-2, 6-2 SEC): 406, 168
- Texas A&M Aggies (6-6, 4-5 B12): 334, 141
- Oregon Ducks (11-2, 8-1 P12): 339, 144
- Michigan State Spartans (10-3, 7-1 B10): 254, 110
- Michigan Wolverines (10-2, 6-2 B10): 339, 156
- Florida Gators (6-6, 3-5 SEC): 283, 133
- Virginia Tech Hokies (11-2, 7-1 ACC): 263, 127
- South Carolina Gamecocks (10-2, 6-2 SEC): 226, 113
- Boise State Broncos (11-1, 6-1 MWC): 332, 166
- Clemson Tigers (10-3, 6-2 ACC): 357, 181
- Vanderbilt Commodores (6-6, 2-6 SEC): 259, 132
- Missouri Tigers (7-5, 5-4 B12): 261, 133
- Miami Hurricanes (6-6, 3-5 ACC): 339, 179
- Kansas State Wildcats (10-2, 7-2 B12): 320, 173
- Nebraska Cornhuskers (9-3, 5-3 B10): 342, 186
- West Virginia Mountaineers (9-3, 5-2 BE): 315, 174
But this is only the beginning; with efficiency and tempo stats in hand, this model can predict future games as well. Bowl season is right around the corner, so without further ado, I present performance-based bowl predictions for 2011-12.

Never heard of Western Michigan? Don't worry; Alex Carder should sling the Broncos to a surprise victory over Big Ten foe Purdue.
- Temple 31, Wyoming 13
- Utah State 44, Ohio 35
- San Diego State 35, UL-Lafayette 27
- Florida International 29, Marshall 17
- TCU 29, Louisiana Tech 20
- Boise State 45, Arizona State 33
- Southern Miss 27, Nevada22
- Missouri 24, North Carolina 20
- Western Michigan 37, Purdue 31
- Louisville 19, NC State 17
- Toledo 35, Air Force 33
- California 31, Texas 28
- Florida State 21, Notre Dame 13
- Baylor 55, Washington 44
- BYU 38, Tulsa 28
- Rutgers 20, Iowa State 17
- Mississippi State 24, Wake Forest 20
- Oklahoma 48, Iowa 20
- Texas A&M 47, Northwestern 23
- Georgia Tech 23, Utah 21
- Vanderbilt 30, Cincinnati 20
- Illinois 24, UCLA 23
- Auburn 24, Virginia22
- Penn State 24, Houston 20

'Bama and LSU are as evenly matched as they come, but the rematch will belong to Trent Richardson and the Tide.
- Georgia 17, Michigan State 16
- South Carolina 23, Nebraska 21
- Florida 27, Ohio State 21
- Wisconsin 41, Oregon 32
- Oklahoma State 39, Stanford 38
- Michigan 24, Virginia Tech 23
- Clemson 42, West Virginia 39
- Arkansas 44, Kansas State 34
- Pittsburgh 27, SMU 12
- Northern Illinois 42, Arkansas State 29
- Alabama 11, LSU 9
We’ll be keeping track of the model’s success here at the Claremont Sports Connection and come back after bowl season with a recap. But if you can’t wait until then, or you want to show me just how wrong I am, you can lay down some picks against me and the rest of the Nightcap team! Send us an email at talk@claremontsportsconnection.com and we’ll get you set up in no time, or you can go to the google docs survey, which takes you to the ESPN Page, or go to our facebook page for more information. But remember, bowl season begins Saturday, December 17, so don’t wait! Enjoy the bowl season!
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Kevin Leyden
Kevin Leyden is a junior engineering major at Harvey Mudd College and talk show broadcasting director of the Claremont Sports Connection. He hails from suburban San Diego and bleeds blue for the Chargers and Padres, as well as the Notre Dame Fighting Irish. Realizing that his home city will never again be home to an NBA franchise, Kevin hopes to settle for the closest possible alternative: driving the bandwagon for the 2012-13 Anaheim Royals. He enjoys engineering most of the time, analyzing the latest in the sporting world on the Nightcap all the time, and playing some tennis in his spare time.


